Kin Kletso Explained

Kin Kletso is a Chacoan Ancestral Pueblo great house and notable archaeological site located in Chaco Culture National Historical Park, southwest of Nageezi, New Mexico, United States. It was a medium-sized great house located 0.5miles west of Pueblo Bonito; it shows strong evidence of construction and occupation by Pueblo peoples who migrated to Chaco from the northern San Juan Basin in the time period of 1125 to 1200 (McElmo Phase of Chacoan Architecture). From its masonry work, rectangular shape and design Kletso is identified as Pueblo III architecture by prominent Chaco archaeologists Stephen H. Lekson and Tom Windes.[1] They also argue that this great house was only occupied by one or two households. Fagen writes that Kletso contained around 55 rooms, four ground-floor kivas, and a two-story cylindrical tower that may have functioned as a kiva or religious center. Evidence of an obsidian production industry were discovered here. The house was erected between 1125 and 1130.[2]

Etymology

Kin Kletso is a garbled mispronunciation of, meaning "Yellow House" in the Navajo language.

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References

36.0652°N -107.97°W

Notes and References

  1. Lekson, S.H (Ed.), The Archaeology of Chaco Canyon, page 91, School of American Research Press, 2006,
  2. .